Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!uwm.edu!psuvax1!psuvm!auvm!DB1!CMSU From: CMSU@DB1.CC.ROCHESTER.EDU Newsgroups: bit.listserv.gaynet Subject: Re: The Nazi Doctors Message-ID: Date: 21 Feb 90 19:20:00 GMT Sender: Gaynet Distribution List Reply-To: gaynet@ATHENA.MIT.EDU Lines: 18 Approved: NETNEWS@AUVM.BITNET Gateway X-Envelope-To: gaynet@ATHENA.MIT.EDU X-Vms-To: IN%"gaynet@ATHENA.MIT.EDU" X-To: gaynet@ATHENA.MIT.EDU Merle-- I don't know what year you were born in, but it is true that 26 states (or so) states had such laws. In fact, when the German eugenics movement was getting underway, ca. the turn of this century, some pointed to the "progressiveness" of the United States, in that some states had those laws. You might be intnerested in the following book: Daniel J. Kevles, IN THE NAME OF EUGENICS: GENETICS AND THE USES OF HUMAN HEREDITY, Univ. of California press, 1985, [call # HQ751.k48 1985]. It is mostly about the US and Britian, but is is the best introduction to the topic of eugenics & race discrimination (historically speaking). There is also a new book out by Paul Weindling, published by Cambridge UP (I think) which is about Nazi medicine, policy etc. Much more detailed than Lifton. I can look up the name of it if you can't find it, our medical history library just got it. Paul W. is an excellent historian/ politically on our side. As to the current political scene & the use of Nazi like ideology, all I can say is Helms, Dannameyer, et al, are not smart enough to try it. Besides, don't they have a problem with modern science too?? --Corinne